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Facing the Nazi Past
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 300

Facing the Nazi Past

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2003-09-02
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  • Publisher: Routledge

"Facing the Nazi Past reflects on the most important developments and debates affecting the way united Germany remembers its past today. This timely account is set to provoke fresh discussion of this dramatic historical period."--Jacket.

Hitler and Film
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 321

Hitler and Film

An exposé of Hitler’s relationship with film and his influence on the film industry A presence in Third Reich cinema, Adolf Hitler also personally financed, ordered, and censored films and newsreels and engaged in complex relationships with their stars and directors. Here, Bill Niven offers a powerful argument for reconsidering Hitler’s fascination with film as a means to further the Nazi agenda. In this first English-language work to fully explore Hitler’s influence on and relationship with film in Nazi Germany, the author calls on a broad array of archival sources. Arguing that Hitler was as central to the Nazi film industry as Goebbels, Niven also explores Hitler’s representation in Third Reich cinema, personally and through films focusing on historical figures with whom he was associated, and how Hitler’s vision for the medium went far beyond “straight propaganda.” He aimed to raise documentary film to a powerful art form rivaling architecture in its ability to reach the masses.

East Kilbride From Old Photographs
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 176

East Kilbride From Old Photographs

Explore a unique and charming look at the history of East Kilbride and its inhabitants, through a fascinating collection of beautiful photographs.

The Buchenwald Child
  • Language: en

The Buchenwald Child

Examines the story of a Jewish child's rescue at Buchenwald and its use as propaganda in both East and united Germany.

The Buchenwald Child
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 276

The Buchenwald Child

At the notorious Buchenwald concentration camp, communist prisoners organized resistance against the SS and even planned an uprising. They helped rescue a three-year-old Jewish boy, Stefan Jerzy Zweig, from certain death in the gas chambers. After the war, his story became a focus for the German Democratic Republic's celebration of its resistance to the Nazis. Now Bill Niven tells the true story of Stefan Zweig: what actually happened to him in Buchenwald, how he was protected, and at what price. He explores the (mis)representation of Zweig's rescue in East Germany and what this reveals about that country's understanding of its Nazi past. Finally he looks at the telling of the Zweig rescue story since German unification: a story told in the GDR to praise communists has become a story used to condemn them. Bill Niven is Professor of Contemporary German History at the Nottingham Trent University, UK.

A Cultural History of Memory in the Long Twentieth Century
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 241

A Cultural History of Memory in the Long Twentieth Century

"A Cultural History of Memory in the Twentieth Century cannot be written without taking into account the massive impact of the nation state on collective memory formation. This volume explores the power of the nation as a framework for the operation of collective memory but, in line with recent memory theory, the contributions also warn against the pitfalls of 'methodological nationalism' which risks subsuming society under the rubric of the nation-state. Likewise, it would be hard to imagine a cultural history of twentieth century memory which did not accord the Holocaust a central place in that history. As such, several chapters in this volume address this genocide. One key concern which e...

A Nation of Victims?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 272

A Nation of Victims?

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2007
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  • Publisher: Rodopi

The re-emergence of the issue of wartime suffering to the fore of German public discourse represents the greatest shift in German memory culture since the Historikerstreit of the 1980s. The (international) attention and debates triggered by, for example, W.G. Sebald's Luftkrieg und Literatur, Günter Grass's Im Krebsgang, Jörg Friedrich's Der Brand testify to a change in focus away from the victims of National Socialism to the traumatic experience of the 'perpetrator collective' and its legacies. The volume brings together German, English and Israeli literary and film scholars and historians addressing issues surrounding the representation of German wartime suffering from the immediate post...

Germans as Victims in the Literary Fiction of the Berlin Republic
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 268

Germans as Victims in the Literary Fiction of the Berlin Republic

An opening section on the 1950s - a decade of intense literary engagement with German victimhood before the focus shifted to German perpetration - provides context, drawing parallels but also noting differences between the immediate postwar period and today. The second section focuses on key texts written since the mid-1990s and examines shifts in perspectives on the Nazi past, on perpetration and victimhood, on "ordinary Germans," and on the balance between historical empathy and condemnation."--BOOK JACKET.

Dynamics of Memory and Identity in Contemporary Europe
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 248

Dynamics of Memory and Identity in Contemporary Europe

The collapse of the Iron Curtain, the renationalization of eastern Europe, and the simultaneous eastward expansion of the European Union have all impacted the way the past is remembered in today’s eastern Europe. At the same time, in recent years, the Europeanization of Holocaust memory and a growing sense of the need to stage a more “self-critical” memory has significantly changed the way in which western Europe commemorates and memorializes the past. The increasing dissatisfaction among scholars with the blanket, undifferentiated use of the term “collective memory” is evolving in new directions. This volume brings the tension into focus while addressing the state of memory theory itself.

Representations of Flight and Expulsion in East German Prose Works
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 230

Representations of Flight and Expulsion in East German Prose Works

Explodes the conventional wisdom that there was a taboo on the topic of flight and expulsion in East Germany.